Governor-General of Finland

Governor-General of Finland (Finnish: Suomen kenraalikuvernööri Swedish: Generalguvernör över Finland Russian: Генерал-губернатор Финляндии); was the military commander and the highest administrator of Finland sporadically under Swedish rule in the 17th and 18th centuries and continuously in the autonomous Grand Duchy of Finland between 1808 and 1917.

Swedish realm

After the final abolition of the Duchy of Finland and related feudal privileges in the late 16th century, the King of Sweden sporadically granted most or all of Finland under a specially appointed governor-general, who took care of the matters in the eastern part of the country more or less according to his own best judgement. Best known of these officials is count Per Brahe whose reign is still referred to in Finland as the "count's days" (kreivin aikaan), meaning something positive that happens just in time.

List of Swedish Governors-General of Finland

Translation in Swedish: Generalguvernör av Finland

In Office Governor -General
1595–1597 Klaus Fleming
1623–1631 Nils Turesson Bielke
1631–1633 Gabriel Bengtsson Oxenstierna
1637–1641 ja 1648–1654 Per Brahe the Younger
1664–1669 Herman Fleming
1710–1712 Karl Nieroth
1717–1721 Gustaf Otto Douglas (during the Russian occupation)
1742–1743 Johan Balthasar von Campenhausen (during the Russian occupation)
1747–1753 Gustaf Fredrik von Rosen

Grand Duchy of Finland

During the time when Finland was a part of the Russian Empire, the Governor-General's position was permanent. He was Vicar of the Emperor, who was not personally present in Helsinki, but resided in St Petersburg, just outside Finnish borders. The Governor-General was constitutionally the chairman of the Senate of Finland, the government in the autonomous Grand Duchy. The chairmanship he represented, with two votes in the Senate, belonged to the Grand Duke of Finland, a title held by the Emperor of Russia. The Governor-General was the highest representative of the Emperor and received his instructions directly from the Imperial Government in Saint Petersburg.

Finnish citizenship was not required of the Governor-General, contrary to all other highest positions such as senators and the Minister-Secretary of State. Most Governors-Generals were Russians, men whom the Emperor trusted as counterparts of potential Finnish separatism. Many of them, up to baron Rokassovski, however were also made Finnish subjects, by granting them a Finnish nobility rank.

Many of the Governors-Generals were disliked by the Finnish population. The first man on the post, Georg Magnus Sprengtporten, resigned after only a year while another, Nikolai Bobrikov, was assassinated in 1904 by the Finnish nationalist Eugen Schauman. On the other hand, several Governor-Generals worked in a way that guaranteed the Finnish autonomy in face of the interests of ministers of the Imperial Court.

The Governor-General between 1831 and 1855, Prince Menshikov, sojourned his entire term in St Petersburg, being simultaneously the Russian Minister of Navy. Gubernatorial duties in Helsinki were cared for by the deputy Governor-General. For most of the term, in that position was general Alexander Amatus Thesleff.

List of Russian Governors-General of Finland

Translation in Russian: Генерал-губернатор Финляндии

Governor-General In Office
Baron Göran Magnus Sprengtporten 1808–1809
Prince Michael Barclay de Tolly 1809–1810
Count Gustaf Mauritz Armfelt 1812-1813 (acting)
Count Fabian Steinheil 1810–1823
Count Arseny Zakrevsky 1824–1831
Prince Alexander Menshikov 1831–1855
Alexander Amatus Thesleff 1833–1847 (acting)
Count Friedrich Wilhelm Rembert von Berg 1855–1861
Baron Platon Rokassovsky 1861–1866
Count Nikolay Adlerberg 1866–1881
Count Feodor Logginovich Heiden 1881–1897
Stepan Goncharov 1897 -1898 (acting)
Nikolai Bobrikov 1898–1904
Prince Ivan Obolensky 1904–1905
Nikolai Gerard 1905–1908
Vladimir von Boeckmann 1908–1909
Franz Albert Seyn 1909–1917
Adam Lipsky 1917 (acting)
Mikhail Aleksandrovich Stakhovich 1917
minister Nikolai Vissarionovich Nekrasov 1917

See also

References

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